A.J. Croce

A.J. Croce Artistfacts

  • September 28, 1971
  • A.J. is Jim Croce's only child. He was born in 1971, two years before Jim died in a plane crash at age 30. Like his dad, A.J. is a singer, songwriter and musician.
  • He started performing when he was just 15. In 1989, at age 18, he was an opening act for BB King, which led to gigs touring with Taj Mahal and Ray Charles. He released his self-titled debut solo album in 1993.
  • A.J. Croce can see only out of his left eye, and that vision is limited. He went completely blind at age 4 after his mother sent him to a boarding school to keep him away from her abusive boyfriend. He developed an ear infection that went untreated and caused him to lose his sight. "The events that led to my blindness were even more traumatic than the blindness itself," he told Blind Abilities.

    Sight in his left eye started coming back a few years later, and he began playing piano at 10, inspired by Ray Charles.
  • Determined to establish his own identity, he rarely played his father's songs or talked about him in interviews until around 2013, when he started performing tribute shows. In 2019 he played full sets of his dad's music on the "Croce Plays Croce" tour.
  • He is the administrator and steward of his father's catalog, so if you need a sync license for a Jim Croce song, it goes through him. He's unearthed a lot of his dad's unreleased songs and in 2017 he recorded one called "Name of The Game" with Vince Gill.
  • A.J. covered his father's song "I Got A Name" for a 2018 Goodyear commercial starting Dale Earnhardt Jr. Both Croce and Earnhardt followed in the footsteps of their famous fathers and had to make a name for themselves on their own.
  • His wife Marlo died in 2018 from a rare and sudden heart virus. They were married for 24 years and had two children together, daughter Camille and son Elijah. A.J. has a routine to make sure they stay in touch. "I've toured through their entire lives, so the connection of our communication on the phone has always been really important, just as it is today even though they're all grown up," he told Songfacts in 2025. "There's a certain connection and a certain time that we speak before I play that's always been really special, and it's worked with and around the music."

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Sarah Brightman

Sarah BrightmanSongwriter Interviews

One of the most popular classical vocalists in the land is lining up a trip to space, which is the inspiration for many of her songs.

Al Kooper

Al KooperSongwriter Interviews

Kooper produced Lynyrd Skynyrd, played with Dylan and the Stones, and formed BS&T.

Reverend Horton Heat

Reverend Horton HeatSongwriter Interviews

The Reverend rants on psychobilly and the egghead academics he bashes in one of his more popular songs.

90210 to Buffy to Glee: How Songs Transformed TV

90210 to Buffy to Glee: How Songs Transformed TVSong Writing

Shows like Dawson's Creek, Grey's Anatomy and Buffy the Vampire Slayer changed the way songs were heard on TV, and produced some hits in the process.

Van Dyke Parks

Van Dyke ParksSongwriter Interviews

U2, Carly Simon, Joanna Newsom, Brian Wilson and Fiona Apple have all gone to Van Dyke Parks to make their songs exceptional.

Richard Marx

Richard MarxSongwriter Interviews

Richard explains how Joe Walsh kickstarted his career, and why he chose Hazard, Nebraska for a hit.